What is a microscope and what does it do?
A special tool that helps us see tiny things that are too small to see with our eyes
What does multicellular mean?
A living thing that has more than one cell
Living things all contain what?
Cells
What are lipids and what do they remind you of(food)?
Fat, Anything that has fat so like meat and steak, fatty fish, anything with fat
What is Hypotonic, Hypertonic, and Isotonic?
Hypo- big, swells, burst
Hyper- shrinks
Iso- just right
which part of the microscope is where the slide goes?
the stage
What is the difference between growth and development?
Growth is like growing in size or getting larger while development is changing and becoming something else
What which part of the cell provides energy for the cell?
Mitochondria
Which element is in all living things?
***DAILY DOUBLE!!!*
Carbon
ATP energy is used in what transport?
Active transport
What are the names of the 2 types of lenses?
Objective and Ocular lenses
What does extinct mean?
none left of the species
True Or false: Lysosomes break up waste in the cell
True
Name me all 4 of the organic compounds
Lipids, carbohydrates, nucleic acids, protein
True or false: Passive transport requires energy?
False
When was the compound microscope invented?
1590
Why is energy important to a living organism?
It allows them to do life process
What is the difference between eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells?
pro is more simple and doesn't have everything that a eu has and for little creatures like bacteria while eu is a plant and animal cell in all living organisms that is more complex and has more parts.
Why is water so important to all living things?
your body is made up of 70% water and you need to be alive and to walk and move and eat and for energy just like all living things
What are examples of Active transport?
Endocytosis and exocytosis
Who is this and what did he do?
***DAILY DOUBLE!!!!***
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, made his own microscope, and described tiny living things called "microorganisms" and called them animalcules which means tiny animals
What does heterotroph and autotroph mean?
Autotroph makes its own food while heterotroph has to go hunt for the food
What are the differences in plant cells and animal cells in parts of a cell?
***DAILY DOUBLE!!!***
Animal cells don't have cell wall, large vacuole, and chloroplasts and Plant cells don't have Lysosomes
What are the functions of all the 4 organic compounds?
Carbohydrates- provide quick energy
Lipids- Long term energy
proteins- build muscle
Nucleic acids- store genetic material and and are the blueprints of all living organisms
Another name for the cell membrane is the what?
Phospholipid Bilayer